Governor of the emotional uncanny valley
This holiday season, sci-fi lovers who want to get swept away to an extraterrestrial world can enjoy the dizzying heights of James Cameron’s last Avatar installment. But those who can’t make it through that film’s three-hour runtime might also consider Ella McCay—a lighthearted gubernatorial comedy that somehow feels more alien than a whole community of Na’vi.
Thus is the curious case of James L. Brooks, the legendary Mary Tyler Moore Show and Simpsons creator who went on to write and direct cinematic classics like Terms Of Endearment and As Good As It Gets. In his heyday, Brooks had a gift for combining the rhythms of screwball comedy with a touching humanism that made his prickly-sweet projects feel like nothing else out there. But starting with 2004’s Spanglish, that balance began to wobble. The characters in Reese Witherspoon’s 2010 dramedy How Do You Know behave so strangely, it may as well take place in an alternate dimension. And though the 85-year-old writer-director clearly wants to recapture the magic of Broadcast News with his first film in 15 years, Ella McCay is another delivery straight from the uncanny valley.
It’s not that there’s one particularly egregious extraterrestrial element about the 2008-set political comedy, which charts three chaotic days in the life of Ella McCay (Emma Mackey), the 34-year-old lieutenant governor of an unnamed state. It’s that everyone acts about 10% off from a screwball comedy character and 15% off from an actual human being, leaving the film and its ensemble stuck in a dramedy no man’s land. One of the recurring “jokes” is that Ella struggles to hear her State Trooper driver (Kumail Nanjiani), even though he’s speaking at a normal volume and she’s just in the backseat. Another involves a (weirdly wholesome) sex scandal that’s introduced like it’s going to be a big deal and then resolved like it’s nothing.
That “all set-up, no payoff” feeling is all over Ella McCay. Brooks spends a lot of time detailing Ella’s unhappy family backstory—from her womanizing dad (Woody Harrelson) to her long-dead mom (Rebecca Hall) to the steely aunt who helped raise her (Jamie Lee Curtis). But it never adds up to a cohesive portrait of a complicated woman. Ella’s politics are vague (she’s pro-moms, anti-weed, and weirdly obsessed with cavities), her talents are ill-defined (she cares about her constituents!), and her communication skills are so poor it’s a wonder she’s made it in politics at all. Ella’s deep longing to be “normal” doesn’t ring true when she’s already so basic; a Cathy cartoon by way of Rory Gilmore.
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